With the unraveling of the deal for the shadowy American Private Police Force to take over and populate an empty jail in Hardin, Montana, it's pretty clear that the small city got played by an ex-con and his (supposed) private security firm.
But an investigation by TPMmuckraker into how Hardin ended up with the 92,000 square foot facility in the first place suggests that, long before "low-level card shark" Michael Hilton ever came to town, Hardin officials had already been taken for a ride by a far more powerful set of players: a well-organized consortium of private companies headquartered around the country, which specializes in pitching speculative and risky prison projects to local governments desperate for jobs.
The projects have generated multi-million dollar profits for the companies involved, but often haven't created the anticipated payoff for the communities, and have left a string of failed or failing prisons in their wake.
"They look for an impoverished town that's desperate," says Frank Smith of the Private Corrections Institute, a Florida-based group that opposes prison privatization. "They come in looking very impressive, saying, 'We'll make money rain from the skies.' In fact, they don't care whether it works or not."
The Pitch

In June 2004, James Parkey, a Texas-based prison developer and architect, met at the Las Vegas airport with Judy Martz, who at the time was the Republican governor of Montana. Described by the Texas Observer as a "polished salesman" for the booming private prison industry, Parkey presents himself on his Web site as a beneficent savior for local communities hit hard by the decline of the manufacturing sector.
Parkey, who runs a company called Corplan Corrections, was seeking to sell Martz on a prison project for her state. His method is to promise a full-service team to handle the entire project from soup to nuts -- what one source described as a "turn-key system."
That team includes a construction firm to build the prison, a prison operator to work with local officials to find prisoners, then run the facility, underwriters to sell the bonds, and even a consultant to do an economic feasibility study. "They walk into a municipality and say, you don't have to do a thing, we'll take care of everything," Christopher "Kit" Taylor, a municipal bond expert who has followed Parkey's operation, told TPMmuckraker.
State officials eventually referred Parkey to the city of Billlings. From there, he was directed 50 miles east, to rural Hardin -- where he found a receptive audience. Parkey promised the town's brass that his team would take care of everything. The project would generate 150 solid jobs. The prison operator in Parkey's team pledged to pay the town a business license fee and at least $100,000 in annual per-prisoner fees.
To officials in a county whose poverty rate is double the national average, that seemed like too good an opportunity to turn down.
Big Pay Day
For Parkey and his crew, the deal soon paid off. The prison's designer and builder, Hale-Mills Construction of Houston, was guaranteed a maximum price of $19.88 million, according to the official bond statement obtained by TPMmuckraker. The exact amount the firm ultimately received isn't known.
And Hardin's $27 million municipal bond sale, conducted in 2006, netted the underwriters -- a pair of companies called Herbert J. Sims, of Connecticut, and Municipal Capital Markets Group (MCM), of Dallas -- a total of $1.62 million. Other players recruited by Parkey -- lawyers, surveyors, and the North Carolina-based consultant who conducted the feasibility study -- reaped $169,750. It's not known how big a cut Parkey took, and he didn't respond to calls for comment.
Hardin itself didn't make out nearly so well. Not a single inmate has ever slept in the jail, and the town hasn't seen a cent of revenue from the project.
The bonds, which were to be paid back through the anticipated -- but non-existent -- revenue, have gone into default, and the bond investors have lost money. The prison "was built on spec," says Taylor, the muni bond expert, who has looked at the Hardin deal. "[The consortium's] whole premise was hell, we don't care what happens to the bonds."
That's left Hardin with an empty jail that it so desperately wanted to fill that it begged first for sex offenders from the state, then for Gitmo inmates from the Feds, and, finally, for some kind of salvation from the American Private Police Force.
A Compromised Consultant?
Central to Hardin official's expectations for the deal was the feasibility study that Parkey's team conducted, which concluded that the project was all but certain to pay off. But that study appears to have been not only deeply flawed, but essentially rigged from the start.

A Montana state auditor found in a 2007 memo that the study -- carried out by Howard Geisler, a North Carolina feasibility consultant specializing in prisons -- was racked with problems. It provides "little methodology" regarding its estimates of potential prisoners for the jail. It lacks "historical data to support anticipated prisoner counts." And it makes "a number of assumptions made related to financial viability that appear to be unfounded," including "potential improvements to local aviation facilities."
In addition, Geisler's study failed to mention that bringing in out-of-state prisoners is potentially illegal under Montana law -- even though that idea was held up as a key method for recruiting prisoners. The state's attorney general challenged Hardin over the provision, and though a judge ultimately sided with the town, it was only after a year of legal wrangling.
Perhaps those flaws aren't surprising. The study was paid for by one of the underwriters, MCM, which had worked frequently with Geisler in the past. A truly independent feasibility study, says Taylor, the muni bond expert, would involve multiple firms making bids to do the job for the city.
Geisler was clearly aware while writing the study of the conflict of interest inherent in the set-up. On one page, he notes in bolded text that, "to assure independence," his fee "is not contingent upon the sale of the Bonds." But Taylor calls that "a smokescreen." "[The passage] is trying to give a sense of legitimacy to the deal, when that's not the case at all," he told TPMmuckraker.
Indeed, the study was in fact the third such report produced on the subject -- and the second by Geisler -- over a two-year period, according to a Montana source close to the process. The first two studies -- the other of which was done internally by Hardin -- came to ambiguous conclusions as to whether the project would succeed. After the first two reports, says the source, "the MCM people had [Geisler] come back and do another. That's when they decided it made sense to go forward."
To this day, some local officials defend the study, arguing that it's easy to criticize with the benefit of hindsight. Dan Kern, Hardin's economic development director in late 2005 and early 2006, told TPMmuckraker he's not sure why support for the project evaporated after the jail was built. "Everybody told me that this was a great project and there was a need for it," he said.
But Taylor says if the official bond statement, which includes the feasibility study, was false or misleading, the bond players have legal liability.

Beyond Hardin
It looks like Hardin isn't the only place where the the lavish promises of Parkey's consortium failed to pan out.
The Montana state auditor's memo notes that, in three separate jail deals with Texas counties, pushed through by Parkey's team, "current revenues are insufficient to cover operating and debt expenses."
And in 2005, three Texas county commissioners were convicted on bribery charges in connection to one of those Parkey-led projects. As in Hardin, MCM acted as the underwriter, and Hale-Mills handled construction.
All of the companies in the consortium either declined to comment for this story or did not return calls and e-mails.

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mepmep09
October 12, 2009 3:23 PM
Thank you for this follow-up, Justin. Ever since this APPF story came out, I've been wondering what the deal was on how that brand new empty prison came into being.
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EarlyOut
October 12, 2009 3:44 PM
I hear there's also been talk of a band. I think I know where I could rustle up some instruments and uniforms....
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EdTheRed
October 12, 2009 3:45 PM
Lyle Lanley : The name's Lanley. Lyle Lanley. And I come before you good people tonight with an idea. Probably the greatest... Aw, it's not for you. It's more of a Shelbyville idea.
Mayor Quimby: Now wait just a minute! We're twice as smart as the people of Shelbyville! Just tell us your idea and we'll vote for it!
Lyle Lanley: All right, I tell you what I'll do. I'll show you my idea! I give you the Springfield Jail! [audience gasps] I've sold jails to Brockway, Ogdenville, and North Haverbrook, and by gum, it put them on the map!
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sandi
October 12, 2009 4:14 PM in reply to EdTheRed
You got it right! How tragic when real life is more absurd than comedy.
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Nowukkers
October 12, 2009 5:03 PM in reply to EdTheRed
Rats! You got there first! One of my favorite Simpsons episodes.
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runfastandwin
October 12, 2009 5:43 PM in reply to EdTheRed
So, to review: mono=one and rail=rail
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Cy Guy
October 12, 2009 9:41 PM in reply to EdTheRed
Mono-Jail!
Mono-Jail!
Mono-Jail!
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serafinapekkala
October 13, 2009 9:43 AM in reply to Cy Guy
"Is there a chance the [cell bars] will bend?"
"Not on your life, my Hindu friend."
"Were you sent here by the devil?"
"No good sir, I'm on the level."
"The ring came off my pudding can!"
"Take my penknife, my good man!"
Sigh...still the funniest thing ever produced by Conan O'Brien...
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jeffgee
October 13, 2009 11:13 AM in reply to EdTheRed
Also, in another episode, Monty Burns turned an art museum designed by Frank Gehry into a prison when the museum ran out of money. "This will make abu Ghraib look like the Four Seasons."
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steve3443
October 12, 2009 3:49 PM
The Private Prison industry is pretty despicable. Other big companies include the Corrections Corporation of America and Geo. There's actually a growing body of scholarship on prison privatization. Tara Herivel and Paul Wright have a good edited book out on it called "Pirison Profiteers: Who Makes Money from Mass Incarceration" that examines all the ways to make profits from incarceration. Chris Uggen and Jeff Manza, as well as the Prison Policy Initiative (out of New York), have done research on how prison populations help in the overrepresentation of some districts in state governments come census time (Prison Policy Initiative), and remove potential voters, usually democrats, from elections (Uggen has an article in the American Sociological Review on this phenomenon). I guess that's the invisible hand of capitalism.
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Marioth
October 12, 2009 5:39 PM in reply to steve3443
The danger is what it does to the inmates. By the time any citizen reaches the doorstep of jail, the cry for help ought to deafen anyone.
Instead of giving inmates a chance through honest work (and I mean W-O-R-K of the 40-60 hours per week variety on the countless things that need doing in this country), we cram them into gyms and wonder why the school's on fire when guards are paid in IOUs, welcome to California? Just a matter of time now.
How we treat these inmates says everything we need to know about American values. In the back of our minds, many of us think inmates deserve to be the targets of deadly sexual predation and no hope of correction OR redemption.
Aye, despicable indeed to profit from it. Makes a cigarette maker look like mother theresa.
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mepmep09
October 12, 2009 4:00 PM
Inspired by references to Lyle Lanley* - who came to the Simpsons' town of Springfield pitching the virtues of a municipal monorail system, and his ability to provide such a system for the right price - here is the Monorail Song (You-Tube, 1:23)
*RIP to the late and much-missed Phil Hartman, who provided Lyle's voice.
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El Vato
October 12, 2009 4:03 PM
Excellent work, i'm so happy to have found this site. Real muckraking is hard to find these days.
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Cal Gal
October 12, 2009 4:07 PM
Can you spell F-R-A-U-D? Where are the feds when you need them to go after criminal "capitalists" rather than local community organizers?
Meanwhile, they want Gitmo prisoners, we can close it pronto. All it takes is for the federal government to exercise a bit of eminent domain, and federal ownership would supersede any Montana law against bringing in out-of-state prisoners.
And with everyone in Montana being armed, there wouldn't be much problem with escaped prisoners.
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billybub
October 12, 2009 4:11 PM
Phenomenal reporting on this.
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sandi
October 12, 2009 4:17 PM
Yet another example of why privatizing public services is a crime! Thanks again, Reaganomics.
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brianm0122
October 12, 2009 4:25 PM
Another common scam is airports. These 'consultants" come into a city, (or some other entity, such as "Econmic Developement commission" and pitch airports and a development factor. They pitch it as a long-range vision, and milk it. it takes years and millions fo dollars spent before the city fathers realize they've been taken. The payback is always "just around the corner".
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Frex
October 12, 2009 4:54 PM in reply to brianm0122
Brian, you're not talking about Mid-America Airport in good ol' Bellville are you?
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rb6
October 13, 2009 9:33 AM in reply to brianm0122
Don't forget taxpayer financed stadiums too -- which, I am okay with, so long as their costs are not paraded around as "investments" in the future. With a few exceptions, they generally aren't, at least not unless accompanied by investments in transporation and other infrastructure.
It is perhaps the most obvious symptom of how sick we have become as a society that our prisons have received outsize increases in financing while our schools and public universities have been relentlessly underfunded.
You get what you pay for, and we are getting dumber by the minute as we house more and more of our citizens for dubious notions of law and order.
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Nowukkers
October 12, 2009 4:35 PM
Haven't these knuckleheads ever seen "The Music Man"? Michael Hilton is the Harold Hill of Hardin, Montana. There's also a marvelous parody of the movie on the Simpsons - the monorail episode.
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chigger
October 12, 2009 4:35 PM
What creeps me out is that Herbert J. Sims & Co. "is a leading national underwriter of tax-exempt bonds for senior housing and long-term care providers."
Senior housing and prisons? Eeek!
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chigger
October 12, 2009 4:39 PM
Actually, when I got to looking into American Private Police Force, I almost expected to find a Wackenhut connection.
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rb6
October 13, 2009 9:38 AM in reply to chigger
Me too. Actually, the more I think of it, prisons are the poor man's stadium or theme park.
The town my husband grew up in has a prison, recently renovated, that actually does what, I guess, Hardin hoped to do -- the difference is that it's less than five hours driving distance from about 8 large cities, so it can house lower risk prisoners, that is, those who still need to meet with lawyers.
But I loathe the prison industrial complex. Unlike the military industrial or health care industrial counterparts, it provides shitty jobs and does nothing but perpetuate human misery, literally, by trying to lobby in favor of increased incarceration as an answer to crime. Honestly, it really shoudl be illegal.
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Ignacious
October 12, 2009 4:40 PM
Best and only reporting I have seen on this subject. These scam artists for the lack of a better term, have no souls.
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mcc
October 12, 2009 4:42 PM
Geez.
For some reason all I can think of is "The Music Man".
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Nowukkers
October 12, 2009 4:56 PM in reply to mcc
Looks like you and I are on the same page. See above.
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mcc
October 12, 2009 5:29 PM in reply to Nowukkers
Heh! I lose.
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Cath
October 12, 2009 5:38 PM in reply to mcc
Good comparison. However, "The Music Man" was fun, tuneful, and everything turned out OK. Hardin, Montana, isn't quite so lucky as River City.
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acf_ma
October 12, 2009 4:51 PM
It looks as if companies like this are trying to do with the penal industry what Blackwater (Xe) did to the military industry, which is turn it into a big profit gold mine.
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steve3443
October 12, 2009 4:57 PM
Chigger:
Look for Geo (they bought Wackenhut).
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chigger
October 12, 2009 6:13 PM in reply to steve3443
Oh, like this one, Steve?
http://realcostofprisons.org/blog/archives/2008/11/the_bond_buyer.html
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Jaycal
October 12, 2009 5:00 PM
Excellent reporting! I hope Josh keeps this in his reference file the next time anyone talks about 'speeding up' public procurement or complains about not contracting out services.
Economic Development receives a tremendous amout of attention in municipal government now that the small community banks and the network of local developers are going the way of Wal-Mart. The large players don't care and the small businesses can't muster up the resources to do anything. So the local government, or a local administrator, steps in with a lot more intention than ability, and the public's tax base, with this result.
TANSTAAFL: There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch
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Kenneth Thomas
October 12, 2009 5:01 PM
Good Jobs First did a study of private prisons back in 2001, "Jail Breaks: Economic Development Subsidies Given to Private Prisons," available at http://www.goodjobsfirst.org/pdf/jailbreaks.pdf
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boz
October 12, 2009 5:08 PM
Great job reporting on this.
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aview999
October 12, 2009 5:29 PM
Wow! Truly an important find! Once again it's corruption through and through. We've got to change this...and fast!
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Marioth
October 12, 2009 5:31 PM
Priceless! The return of The Music Man, featuring James Parkey as Prof. Harold Hill.
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jfields
October 12, 2009 6:07 PM
This is all very easy to solve.
Private prisons of any kind should be illegal. Period. There's no justification for running this as a for-profit industry, and lots of reasons not to.
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socraticgadfly
October 12, 2009 7:51 PM
The Nation was already on this issue in the late 1990s, when Whack Your Nuts and CCA first started mushrooming. That said, while this problem is the biggest in the U.S., Australia and other countries have drank at least some of the Kool-Aid, too.
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Texas Aggie
October 12, 2009 9:35 PM
I notice with little or no surprise that the prime crook in this whole affair is a citizen of the Republic. And that in his inimitable fashion he took down several other Texans in his crooked dealings. Crooks and Longnecks! Only in Texas!
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Dave Bowman
October 12, 2009 10:51 PM
I maintain my position that we need to fill our prisons--with White Collar criminals.
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mac2151
October 13, 2009 12:19 AM
First, never jusp into a pile of leaves with a wet sucker.
Second, that contract about holding the football was never notarized.
But, it gets worse Charlie Brown. Aguirre Inc, part of the prison building consortium, is now Aguirre Roden.
Mark Roden was the cop in Alabama that had the, so-called, auto accident with Jill Simpson when she was making waves in the Don Siegelman case.
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M2
October 13, 2009 1:39 AM
Fine work again at TPM-MR. This town needs and deserves some help after this graft. Forgive me if it's been said already, but I nominate ABC--
"Extreme Makeover: 92,000 sq ft Jail Edition" Town residents provide security and "entertainment" for the slime that did this to them.
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Kropotkin
October 13, 2009 2:24 AM
Absolutely wonderful article on this dangerous and costly for-profit prison industry. In the spirit of Upton Sinclair, Sinclair Lewis, Ida Tarbell and I.F. Stone.
See also http://www.privateci.org and http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com
for more information on Hardin, CorPlan, Municipal Capital Markets and prison privatization in general
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Gilead
October 13, 2009 2:43 AM
Thank you for this piece.
The human rights abuses in U.S. prisons is also a worthy topic that deserves exposure.
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brillobreaks
October 13, 2009 5:49 AM
Good to see you guys covering (part of) the real story. Those of us who are locals and watched this all go down, already knew all of this, as it was covered extensively in the Billings Gazette at the time.
It's too bad you didn't cover this before treating us to a few weeks of Alex Jones style conspiracy theory mongering.
Now how about covering the rest of the real stories:
The actual reason the city wants a separate police force- tiny White town on the edge of a couple huge poor Indian reservations upset that the Indians run the police force.
Greg and Kerri Smith's efforts to bring these guys in to help boost their personal fortunes (new jobs and the mayor's position).
The fact that after the TRA failed to get any prisoners and defaulted on their bonds, the Crow Tribe, the BIA, and the feds offered to take the prison off of these guys hands, and they refused. They'd rather default and end up owing $30 million bucks on this thing than let the Indians run it.
I'll say it again- there are real stories here, interesting stories, things that deserve covering.
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mepmep09
October 13, 2009 9:03 AM in reply to brillobreaks
One of the main reasons I avidly read the comments on articles like this is in hopes of hearing some local perspective, so I thank you very much for what you have written here. The context you've provided makes a lot of sense, and is very useful in understanding how this mess came about.
If there are links* to the Billings Gazette articles you mentioned - assuming they are online - some of us would probably like to read those as well (*there is always Google or comparable search engines, but such searching can be a hit-or-miss proposition, especially if one does not choose well among possible search words/phrases; I might have a go at it when I get home from work though).
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rb6
October 13, 2009 9:43 AM in reply to brillobreaks
Everything in America always comes down to race, doesn't it?
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NitPicker1
October 13, 2009 9:50 AM in reply to brillobreaks
That's an angle I've been curious to hear more about... the population of Big Horn county is about two-thirds Native American, the majority of its land is the Crow & Cheyenne reservations. According to the census a third of the people in the county speak languages other than English at home.
Hardin on the other hand is two-thirds white.
But on top of that, the jurisdictional rules for law enforcement and justice on Indian lands can be insanely complex (where the crime took place, and whether or not the perpetrator or the victim were Indian, matters...)
How much of the tension between the city and the county is due to race, how much to the complex jurisdictional rules for law enforcement on Indian lands?
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DownriverDem
October 13, 2009 9:08 AM
The Republican Way: Privatize everything and reap the money!
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Johann
October 13, 2009 9:58 AM in reply to DownriverDem
Privatize the profits - Socialize the debt.
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JeannonKralj
October 13, 2009 9:59 AM
Here is one link to a Billings local tV affiliate article...
http://www.kulr8.com/home/related/63901022.html
Thank you, Justin Elliott, for this higy quality journalism. Will hang around this site from now one.
__________________
It is my understanding that snakes like James Parkey et al. are able to rake off some money up front and then split. I would like some elaboratation on exactly how that happens - money flow.
_________
I am appalled at what all this means to we the people. The graft and corruption at the federal, state, county, and city, and "regional planning" entities is just enough to send honest citizens into the fetal position. The CORRUPTION is monumental, lethal, and fatal.
I am thinking the whole idea of parties and politicking and voting is just a miserable scam too.
There is no justice in our courts and if there any honest judges left, they can't get into office because of voting machine and other kinds of vote fraud.
_________________
Thanks BrilloBreaks for complete inside info. It is hard to believe the hate and racism that resides in our "city leaders'" souls, souls which have probably been sold to Lucifer a long time ago.
I think though that there may be more to the city turning down the bid to buy the prison by the federal government. If the fed. govt. had purchased that jail, the fed. govt would in effect own the whole town and that would be a totalitarian police state takeover for sure.
I still think the impending police state by the feds is very real and think it may be connected to his episode in Hardin, but cannot spell out connections yet.
_______
I do know that all these contracts granted are fraught with corruption, and now with the United Nations Agenda 21 / Sustainable Development public / private partnerships scams raining on our sovereign states, our entire economic, social, legal, and justice systems are being changed to the "third way" - combination of totalitarian socialism and communisim and fascism and NAZIism.
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JamHandy
October 13, 2009 9:59 AM
Becky Shay, who quit her job as a Billings Gazette reporter to become APF's spokeswoman in Hardin, used similar language in describing her decision to sign on with the company.
I agree that the local angle on this story is interesting. I was reading an Oct. 1st Billings Gazette article: http://www.billingsgazette.com/news/state-and-regional/montana/article_02f22c2e-ae4a-11de-8892-001cc4c002e0.html which discusses Becky Shay...
Was she tempted away by promises of a large salary, manifested by the use of a new Mercedes SUV she was given to drive around in? Not to pile on her decision to go for the gold, but the decisions by private or public sector individuals to trade their public hat for the private sector has always fascinated me. We see it often with politicals going the lobbyist route and here it is a "fourth estater" going spokesperson for a company she was just previously reporting on. The story becomes all the more poignant by the fact that the company she was tempted by apparently is nothing more than a scam.
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NitPicker1
October 13, 2009 10:18 AM in reply to JamHandy
That struck me a such a weird thing for her to say at the time - "assurances and faith" about the mysterious parent company. And then that she couldn't say who it was. She can't say who it is, and furthermore she can't say why she can't say who it is.
What possible rational for keeping the identity of the parent group secret could the APF con man have given her?
Who or what did she (and that Peterson guy, for that matter) think they were protecting by refusing to divulge the name of the alleged parent company?
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Johann
October 13, 2009 2:36 PM in reply to NitPicker1
"What possible rational for keeping the identity of the parent group secret could the APF con man have given her?"
NATIONAL SECURITY!!!
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Stan of the Sawgrass
October 13, 2009 11:16 AM
Industrial-strength incorporated con-men, preying on small-town desperation. "The mark takes the fall" is part of the process. Does anyone remember the Simpsons episode where a "Music Man"-type outsider hustles Springfield into buying a Monorail?
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NitPicker1
October 13, 2009 11:48 AM in reply to Stan of the Sawgrass
Apparently so. See numerous comments above. :-)
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Douglas Simon
October 13, 2009 12:12 PM
Is the Billings Gazette going to rehire Becky Shay?
I created a blog on their site and posted an open letter to the Billings Gazette's editor
Yesterday I received an email from them that said
WTH?
I thought she quit her job there so how can this possibly be an "internal personnel" matter?
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Johann
October 13, 2009 2:40 PM in reply to Douglas Simon
"I thought she quit her job there so how can this possibly be an "internal personnel" matter?"
Her quitting is not an internal personnel matter, but any talk, discussion, or ideas about rehiring her is definitely an internal personnel matter.
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Stan of the Sawgrass
October 13, 2009 12:36 PM
Sorry, had to rush out before reading the Monorai posts! As a resident of New Brockton, I just wanted to make sure our story was heard.
Back to feeding Bitey the possum.
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xenubarb
October 13, 2009 2:07 PM
This private police force/jail thing is as disturbing to me as the private armed force formerly known as Blackwater.
However, there are some laughs to be had when a wanna-be private incarceration company does it wrong.
I give you Second Chance, a company owned by a pair of skivey Scientologists, who convinced the city of Albuquerque, NM that leasing an unused facility for an inmate drug rehab program was a good idea. The conditions set were quite clear; misdemeanor inmates only, male only. The issue of the validity and effectiveness of the fraudulent "drug rehab" program wasn't addressed. It should have been, because it's based on the junk science of L. Ron Hubbard, and utilizes dangerously toxic overdoses of vitamins coupled with hours spent in a sauna. The hazards of saunas recently made the news. Called the "Purification Rundown," this potentially dangerous treatment would certainly result in lawsuits had anything gone wrong in Joy Westrum's toy prison.
No, the safety of the inmates' health was not under consideration. But the required documents weren't forthcoming from Second Chance. Moreover, it turned out that this group told different judges in different counties different things as they shopped for inmates throughout New Mexico. Some were even told the Second Chance facility could be used for overflow. So it was found that, not only felons, but women were being held there!
After a local TV news station reported the story, Second Chance scuttled out of town in the wee hours of the night, leaving staff unpaid, owing thousands in rent, and reportedly stealing stoves and refrigerators from the kitchen, but leaving a sauna they'd built without permits.
Bumbling fools who try to con the public are entertaining. Thankfully this low-grade con man was exposed. Maybe he'll spend some time in his own prison some day!
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kernel
October 13, 2009 2:26 PM
Could it maybe be made into a Holiday Inn?
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JeannonKralj
October 13, 2009 4:06 PM
"Bumbling fools who try to con the public are entertaining. Thankfully this low-grade con man was exposed. Maybe he'll spend some time in his own prison some day!"
These are not bumbling fools. These crooks infest all our little towns and villages. They are liars, cheats and thieves and they are raping every American citizen. I do not find this entertaining. Only one con-man was exposed this time and he probably won't go to jail. But the woman and her husband who sneaked this travesty through ought to go to jail too. My city council is in cahoots with one financial scam like this after another, and it stinks to high heavens.
We the people have to just let the thefts go on and watch our property and property rights, and civil rights be anihilated and our taxes to up, up, up.
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bayside
October 13, 2009 5:34 PM
Rename this the family values prison, and they will come...BetcA
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psyopswatcher
October 14, 2009 7:52 PM
Keep the fear and war-mongering coming and the demand for prison space won't be far behind, quickly followed by Capitalists cashing in on government out-sourcing. Face it, they'll take anyone's money. Now where did we learn that from?
Meanwhile, a couple years ago over in Europe, the CIA was building secret prisons with a Swiss Senator, Dick Marty, hot on their trail. Anyone remember our Swiss Ambassador, Pamela Willeford, a member of Cheney's Texas shoot-em-up hunting party? I seem to recall that Marty had been requesting information just prior to her meeting with Cheney down on the range. The 'victim' of the hunt turned out to be a prison expert, Harry Whittington. The day after the shooting details began to emerge, our late, great Molly Ivins spilled the beans on that connection.
"Whittington is seriously civilized, particularly on the issues of crime, punishment and prisons. He served on both the Texas Board of Corrections and on the bonding authority that builds prisons."
Read more at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/molly-ivins/cheney-shoots-a-texas-lib_b_15727.html
Now what could Harry have been telling Dick when he got shot in the face? I always knew there was more to that story than was ever made public.
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William Thomas
October 15, 2009 11:06 AM
INCARCERATING PEOPLE "FOR PROFIT" IS IN A WORD....WRONG!
Even if one does not ask or pretends not to see the rope and the flashing red flag draped around the philosophical question standing solemnly at attention in the middle of the room, it remains apparent that the mere presence of a private “for profit” driven prison business in our country undermines the U.S Constitution and subsequently the credibility of the American criminal justice system. In fact, until all private prisons in America have been abolished and outlawed, “the promise” of fairness and justice at every level of this country’s judicial system will remain unattainable. We must restore the principles and the vacant promise of our judicial system. Our government cannot continue to "job-out" its obligation and neglect its duty to the individuals confined in the correctional and rehabilitation facilities throughout this nation, nor can it ignore the will of the people that it was designed to serve and protect. There is urgent need for the good people of this country to emerge from the shadows of indifference, apathy, cynicism, fear, and those other dark places that we migrate to when we are overwhelmed by frustration and the loss of hope.
My hope is that you will support the National Public Service Council to Abolish Private Prisons (NPSCTAPP) with a show of solidarity by signing "The Single Voice Petition"
http://www.petitiononline.com/gufree2/petition.html
Please visit our website for further information: http://www.npsctapp.blogspot.com
–Ahma Daeus
"Practicing Humanity Without A License"…
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psyopswatcher
October 16, 2009 11:02 AM in reply to William Thomas
Maybe this is what Whittington was trying to get through to Cheney when Dead-Eye lost it and let the buckshot fly?
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JeannonKralj
October 15, 2009 11:55 AM
William Thomas, I applaud your stance and agree private prisons are wrong.
However, I believe the basic tenets of our Constitutional Republic and the rule of law and the legal justice system are simply no more. There has been a silent gradual coup. Evil bad people with evil bad ideas have taken over our government from top to bottom.
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abouthadit2
October 26, 2009 9:27 PM
Not a bad article as far as it goes, but a real investigative reporter would have elucidated the role of the Greg and Kerri Smith. There is a lot more here that is in this article. He was suspended without pay from the 2 Rivers Authority and she was offered a job with APF if she lost her run for Mayor. Say WHAT?
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